Saturday, October 12, 2019
Impotence & Isolation – The Slow Death of Global American Influence
A Nation Out-of-Touch
It’s complicated. On paper, we seem
to have it all when it comes to global power. We account for 41% of the entire
world’s military budget, have bases and naval operations all over the world. We
are the largest economy in the world, and even as China grows its power, on a
per capita valuation, it is far behind the United States. The US dollar is the
major reserve currency on earth; effectively, the United States sits at the
fulcrum of international banking. We have more of the finest colleges and
universities, by far, than any other nation on earth. We have an absolute veto
power on the UN Security Council. We are still rich in natural resources and
have some of the most productive farms in the world. We are tech leaders.
But then… Our military operations are
so spread out over the globe that we have sacrificed true power in any one
region to maintain power everywhere. In most of Asia, for example, China’s
vastly smaller fleets of naval vessels, her air operations, and her ability to
move ground forces are so concentrated, so much more present than any American
military counterpart, that the PRC is absolutely the dominant military force in
that region. That the United States has not won a major military engagement
since World War II is not lost on Russia or China. They watched as long-term
military efforts, in Vietnam, Afghanistan and Iraq, have bled American
resources and uniformly have failed to achieve even modest success.
We may be the most important reserve
currency in the world and effectively control global banking, but … There are
very powerful movements afoot, even among our purported allies, to demote the
dollar as that trading reference (preferring a blended replacement) and to
create new European trading exchanges to circumvent US trade boycotts that are
enforced through that banking stranglehold. While the US is still the biggest
economy in the world, all of our global competitors (especially China) are upping
their foreign aid, updating and repairing their infrastructure to the max,
pouring new money into education and research and reducing their reliance on
economic trade with the US.
As we continue to cut our own
governmental support to education and research – adopting a downright hostility
to science and scientific fact – we can also watch our infrastructure fall
apart with little in the way of relevant countermeasures. Instead our
government prefers to mount trade wars that are forcing former buying trading
partners – particularly when it comes to our agricultural output – to find new permanent
and more reliable exporting nations, countries that are unlikely to use tariffs
to enforce heavy political agendas.
By excoriating leaders in allied
nations, from Germany to Denmark, and supporting brutal autocrats – from
Vladimir Putin to Kim Jong-un – we make a mockery of our commitment to
democracy and human rights. By embracing extremist views, from Boris Johnson’s
vision of a hard Brexit to Benjamin Netanyahu’s rejection of Palestinian
residents’ rights to Saudi Arabia’s wonton bombing of civilians in Yemen, we
are now viewed as a friend to extremist governments. We pulled out of the Iran
nuclear accord under the assumption that our economic sanctions would force
them to bow to our demands.
Instead, we have European nations
finding loopholes to circumvent our sanctions, creating permanent structures to
dilute American economic power, and watch Iran escalate its regional military
might and resume nuclear enrichment. Now, to placate Iran’s leadership, Europe
is proposing a $15 billion economic lifeline to Iran, one which Trump is
increasingly being forced to consider. Clearly, our 40 years of hardline
policies against Iran, a commitment to immediate regime change, have failed and
continue to fail.
Our government’s recalcitrance to enter
multinational treaties, a passionate belief that bilateral bullying
negotiations are the right way to go, have created global efforts to do what other
countries believe is right and create the necessary workarounds to obviate the
need for American acceptance or participation. Europe has benefited greatly by
the increased trade with China, at our expense, from the replacement treaties
that spawned when the US pulled out of the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Russia,
despite its military support of the brutal Assad regime in Syria, is far more
relevant to most of the Middle East than is the United States. We have made a
lot of sworn enemies in our support of extremist views in Israel and Saudi
Arabia.
Even when it comes to taming the
rogue nation of Syria, it is increasingly obvious that the United States is
powerless to impact any reasonable outcome. Instead, Russia has embraced NATO
ally Turkey (which continues to treat pro-US, anti-Assad Kurdish fighters as
terrorists) and Iran to create a new governmental structure in Syria. “The
leaders of Turkey, Russia and Iran announced Monday [9/16] that an agreement
has been reached on the composition of a committee tasked with rewriting Syria’s
constitution as part of a political solution to the country’s civil war, now in
its ninth year.
“Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan told journalists at the end of the meeting with Russia’s Vladimir Putin
and Iran’s Hassan Rouhani in the Turkish capital, Ankara, that differences on
one last committee member have been overcome, paving the way for the committee
to start working as soon as possible.
“‘We portrayed a constructive and
flexible attitude to determine constitutional committee members and rules of
procedure. We made an effort for the political process to move forward. In
short, hitches regarding the establishment of the committee were eliminated by
our mutual efforts,’ Erdogan said… Russia and Iran are key allies of Syrian
President Bashar Assad while Turkey backs Syrian rebels seeking to oust him.”
Associated Press, September 17th. Whatever the result, we have two
likely results: a new Syrian governmental structure that will remain
antithetical to US goals and confirmation of the irrelevance of US
influence on regional solutions.
Without allies at our side, with an
exceptionally unpopular reputation as an unreliable bully, most of anything we
need to accomplish on the global stage – of critical importance to American
companies in a global marketplace – will be increasingly at our sole expense…
the price of go-it-alone bullying. In hard dollars, that arrogance will cost us
trillions of dollars in the immediate future. Resetting our influence and
reputation will take decades… and probably will never achieve what we had just
five years ago.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and I suspect we just must be tired of winning so very very much.
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